Austin Kleon's talk "Steal Like An Artist" is a creative manifesto based on 10 things he wish he'd heard when he was starting out. Austin is a writer and artist. He's the author of Newspaper Blackout, a best-selling book of poetry made by redacting newspaper articles with a permanent marker. Austin's talk was delivered as part of the TEDxKC presentation of TEDxChange.
Austin's work (including his new book) "Steal Like An Artist" has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The Wall Street Journal. He speaks about creativity, visual thinking, and being an artist online for organizations such as SXSW and The Economist.
About TEDx
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

published:24 Apr 2012

views:475687

Learn how to draw faces step by step from scratch. In this tutorial, you'll learn how to draw male and female faces. I'll also demonstrate how to transform your characters by making simple changes.
UPDATE: After receiving a lot of feedback about the speed of this video, I'm going to re-upload it so it's a lot slower for beginners and include a few more details in my instruction. Thanks for all your feedback guys!
Requested by: WendyNelson :)
Written version of this tutorial: http://rapidfireart.com/2017/10/24/how-to-draw-faces-for-beginners-easy/
TOOLS I USED (click the link above to see where you can buy them)
- Canson SketchPaper
- 2B DerwentGraphicPencil (I recommend HB for light sketching)
- Random 0.7mm HB pencil (usually use 0.5mm Pentel Ain but I couldn't find it anywhere)
- Prismacolor Kneaded Eraser
- PlasticMono Eraser
- Transparent Ruler
SKIP TO...
How to draw a male face: 0:10
Male...
Eyes: 1:19
Nose: 2:13
Lips: 2:42
Hair: 3:38
Ears: 4:20
Cheeks, Jaw, Chin: 4:42
Neck: 5:09
Male - First transformation: 5:21
How to draw a female face: 7:51
female...
Eyes: 8:44
Nose: 9:32
Lips: 10:02
Ears: 10:42
Hair: 10:56
Neck: 11:33
Female - First transformation: 11:39
RELATED TUTORIALS
How to draw hair: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGcOEkl1coU&lc=UgyllYF61K9eLQ5H0ZZ4AaABAg
How to draw a pair of eyes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs4fSe-hSIk&t=25s
How to draw noses: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DeFv3pg_Fxk&t=25s
How to draw lips: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFVTfgXDBWg
How to draw 6 different eye shapes: http://rapidfireart.com/2017/01/19/how-to-draw-different-eye-shapes/
How to shade a faces:
http://rapidfireart.com/2016/08/09/how-to-shade-a-face/
FOLLOW ME HERE:
Website: www.rapidfireart.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/RapidFireArtTutorials
MUSIC USED:
(These are affiliate links to AudioJungle)
https://goo.gl/KYX24o
https://goo.gl/azBBsW
https://goo.gl/f4xmaF

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks for watching!
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
15 - Painters Paradise…
This is another surreal piece of work from AnnieRalli, whom we mentioned earlier… this stunning illusion is created with lots of patience, love and creativity. Annie used to be a BBC scenic artist where she worked for 10 years.
14 - Art has no rules…
And Chooo-San knows that only too well. This is another one of her incredible creations. Chooo-San only uses acrylic paints to create these inventive body art designs and she discovered she had a talent when she was doodling eyes on the back of her hands whilst taking breaks from her studies.
13 - Your body is my canvas…
So, says Alexa Meade, an installation artist from America. She paints portraits directly on to bodies, and somehow manages to lose the depth of the subjects to make everything 2d. She initially thought she would go into politics, but aren’t you glad she didn’t? She’s worked on projects all around the world!
12 - Eye opening…
Or in this illusion, mouth opening! This is one designed by Swedish make-up artist Sandra Holmborm, perfectly placed eyebrows and an iris that seems to pull you in, this creation is enough to freak anyone out!
11 - Hard to focus…
This crazy illusion has been recreated by a few people, and the results are always the same… one battles to actually look at it without scrunching up one’s eyes, or trying to close one eye to view it properly. This is one you have to try at your next Halloween.
10 - No humans were harmed…
In the making of this video… This is a special piece created by Jonathan Harris, who has around 600 000 YouTube subscribers, who love watching him create the most insane art on his hand! He calls it, Cool 3D trick art optical illusion”
9 - Piece of work…
I would love to know how long it takes for these make-up artists to put together their incredible pieces. This is just upping the Halloween make-up level to the top, where most of us would never, ever be able to reach! I actually feel sorry for the little kids who meet her in the street!
8 - Just Face It…
She’s talented! This is Dain Yoon, a college student from South Korea where she is studying art. She uses her face as her canvas, and her inspiration is the complexity of human beings. It can sometimes take around 12-hours to complete one of her projects.
7 - Cats out the bag…
This beautiful tiger was created using 3 people to provide the canvas, so you can only image how massive this was and how still those 3 models had to sit, whilst the artist prepared their bodies for this amazing project.
6 - Fright Night…
After watching a video like this, you really gain a whole new appreciation for these talented artists, don’t you?
5 - Wooden Doll comes to life…
This mind-blowing illusion was created by Mirjana Kika Milosevic, a make-up artist from Serbia. This wooden puppet doll won her internet fame and the “national NYXFaceAwards competition” in the category for optical illusions.
4 - See it to believe it…
Here’s another stunning creation from Jonathan Harris, and he really does make the creating of this super illusion so easy. He has won many awards for his incredible work, and his videos are surreal to watch.
3 - Through the looking glass…
You can imagine these designs in something like Alice in Wonderland. This was done by NatalieFletcher from Oregon, who creates very unusual illusions on male torsos. Some of her designs look like there’s things moving underneath the surface of the skin, while others look like a deep hole into nothingness!
2 - Look again…
It does sort of look like this car is melting, which already is a bit unusual… but take a closer look and see how the people have been transformed into this vehicle.
1 - Just an illusion…
We wrap it up with one last piece from Chooo-San, and be thankful that this one is just an illusion. Because seriously, the thought of a little man being stowed away in a pouch like a Joey on one’s stomach, is just not a very good thought at all, wouldn’t you agree?

published:24 Jan 2017

views:1926531

Visit my FB: https://www.facebook.com/LeonardoPereznieto
List of Materials:
Lead Holder (2mm leads), red. - See it here http://amzn.to/2kt5JAs
HB 2mm leads. See them here: http://amzn.to/2jWgVCo
Lead pointer - See it here: http://amzn.to/2ktexWH
Paper: Fabriano Ecological Drawing Pad, 8-1/4 X 11-3/4, white -. See it here: http://amzn.to/2jx7hKl
Visit my website: http://www.artistleonardo.com/
FollowFineArt Tips on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/102704788338918986617/+FineArtEBooks/posts
Visit: http://www.fineartebooks.com/ for free drawing tutorials.
If you would like to invest in a drawing, painting or sculpture by Leonardo Pereznieto, please write to: info@leonardopereznieto.com
You may also follow me on:
My Blog: http://www.fineartebooks.com/howtodraw_drawingschool/My_Blog/My_Blog.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/ArtistLeonardo
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=89957576&trk=tab_pro
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/100373866809472929876/posts
VK: http://vk.com/leonardopereznieto
Leonardo Pereznieto: http://www.leonardopereznieto.com/leo/Intro.html
Do you want to help me translating it into your language?
(Note: First check if it hasn´t been translated already by pressing the "CC" button on the lower part of the video).
All you need to do is translate the file at the link below and send it to me:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0UOw8r7hWG2eWE2Z2c5a1JGdXM/edit
With this video I’ll teach you how to draw a figure from the imagination and the memory. I’ll show you how to do the basic structure of the boy in a simple and easy way, to draw a realistic person with movement. You’ll learn which basic bones are important to crate the physical structure and know how to apply gesture lines in order to imitate the movement of the body.
¡To draw a figure from the mind you should have a basic knowledge of anatomies in order to mimetic it!
Как нарисовать фигуру из воображения
Как нарисовать фигуру с ума
как нарисовать рисунок по памяти
Comment dessiner un personnage avec l'imagination
كيف ترسم جسم الانسان من خيالك
Come disegnare la figura umana a memoria
Come disegnare la figura umana dall'immaginazione
如何绘画想象中的人物
Eine Figur aus der Phantasie
Cum sa desenezi o figura din imaginatie
Як намалювати фігуру з уяви
Ինչպես նկարել մարդկային կերպար պատկերացումով, մաս 1
கற்பனையில் இருந்து உருவம் வரைவது எப்படி
Sådan tegner du en figur udfra din forstilling

published:08 Jan 2013

views:3164866

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
IdeaChannelFacebook! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelfacebook
Talk about this episode on reddit! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelreddit
Idea Channel IRC! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelirc
Email us! pbsideachannel [at] gmail [dot] com
Support Idea Channel on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/pbsideachannel
Our AI Generated Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p10knivMRg
From drawing machines to early digital art and now AI, we’ve wondered whether the fundamentally human seeming endeavor of ART MAKING can be done by machines. At Idea Channel, we think the answer is unequivocally, yes! Perhaps the better question would be, will we ever let machines make art on their own? Will we ever be able to scrub away the influence and bias of the humans that created the machines making said art? And if so, how will we respond to the art being made by machines? How will it be appreciated? Will AI produced works ever be treated as art is traditionally treated–widely traded, curated, collected, critiqued? Let us know what you think in the comments below!
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CHECK OUT OUR MERCH!
http://bit.ly/1U8fS1B
T-Shirts Designed by:
http://artsparrow.com/
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TWEET OF THE WEEK:
https://twitter.com/darcypaynter/status/748059272236269568
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FURTHER READING & SOURCES:
http://www.footnotes.pbsideachannel.com
http://footnotes.pbsideachannel.com/list-sources-on-ai-and-creativity/
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
ASSET LINKS:
Assets in this episode can be found listed in this Google Doc!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12wEhlV4ogddgNW-THDZNhGzdSCWspddxIZba3wq-40k/edit?usp=sharing
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­-------------------------­-­-­-
MUSIC at 2:40
Monotone - Minimalist
https://soundcloud.com/montone-2/minimalist
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
Written and hosted by Mike Rugnetta (@mikerugnetta)
(who also has a podcast! Reasonably Sound: http://bit.ly/1sCn0BF)
Made by Kornhaber Brown (http://www.kornhaberbrown.com)

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

published:05 Dec 2017

views:25869

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnFromMasters/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
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Thank you so much for your support!

English National Ballet

English National Ballet is a classical ballet company founded by Dame Alicia Markova and Sir Anton Dolin and based at Markova House in South Kensington, London, England. Along with The Royal Ballet, Birmingham Royal Ballet and Scottish Ballet, it is one of the four major ballet companies in Great Britain. English National Ballet is one of the foremost touring companies in Europe, performing in theatres throughout the UK as well as conducting international tours and performing at special events. The Company employs approximately 67 dancers and a symphony orchestra, (English National Ballet Philharmonic) and there is also an associate school, English National Ballet School, which is independent from the ballet company. The Company regularly performs seasons at the London Coliseum and has been noted for specially staged performances at the Royal Albert Hall. In 2014 English National Ballet became an Associate Company of Sadler's Wells. The Patron of English National Ballet is HRHThe Duke of York.

The Art

The Art (sometimes stylised as THEART) are an Australian Alternative Rock band based in Sydney. They began performing under the name The Follow in 2004. Tasmanian band leader Azaria Byrne was known as an unsuccessful contestant on the reality television series Popstars.

Art

Art is a diverse range of human activities in creating visual, auditory or performing artifacts – artworks, expressing the author's imaginative or technical skill, intended to be appreciated for their beauty or emotional power. In their most general form these activities include the production of works of art, the criticism of art, the study of the history of art, and the aesthetic dissemination of art.

The oldest form of art are visual arts, which include creation of images or objects in fields including painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, and other visual media. Architecture is often included as one of the visual arts; however, like the decorative arts, it involves the creation of objects where the practical considerations of use are essential—in a way that they usually are not in a painting, for example. Music, theatre, film, dance, and other performing arts, as well as literature and other media such as interactive media, are included in a broader definition of art or the arts. Until the 17th century, art referred to any skill or mastery and was not differentiated from crafts or sciences. In modern usage after the 17th century, where aesthetic considerations are paramount, the fine arts are separated and distinguished from acquired skills in general, such as the decorative or applied arts.

Steal Like an Artist

Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative is a book on coming up with creative ideas, by Austin Kleon, published in 2012 from Workman Publishing. The book, has since then become a New York Times Bestseller. Kleon presents himself as a young writer and artist emphasizing that creativity is everywhere and is for everyone. In his own words, "You don’t need to be a genius, you just need to be yourself".
Kleon points out that no artist's work is ever completely original, and that trying to be completely original will daunt an artist and eventually smothers his creativity. He suggests artists embrace the inevitability of influence, to celebrate living outside of a vacuum, to relax, and have fun with their art. Beyond that, he also goes on to offer tips on how to stay focused, upbeat, and be receptive to incoming inspiration.

Backdrop

When Mr. Kleon was asked to address college students at Broome Community College in upstate New York in 2011, he shaped his speech around a simple list of ten things he wished someone had told him when he was starting out at their age. They were: 'Steal like an artist; Don't wait until you know who you are to start making things; Write the book you want to read; Use your hands; Side projects are important; Do good work and put it where people can see it; Geography is no longer our master; Be nice (the world is a small town.); Be boring (it's the only way to get work done.); and, Creativity is subtraction.
After giving the speech, he posted the text and slides of the talk to his popular blog.
The talk went viral, and Kleon dug deeper and expanded to create the book, for anyone attempting to make things - art, a career, a life - in the digital age.

Steal Like An Artist: Austin Kleon at TEDxKC

Austin Kleon's talk "Steal Like An Artist" is a creative manifesto based on 10 things he wish he'd heard when he was starting out. Austin is a writer and artist. He's the author of Newspaper Blackout, a best-selling book of poetry made by redacting newspaper articles with a permanent marker. Austin's talk was delivered as part of the TEDxKC presentation of TEDxChange.
Austin's work (including his new book) "Steal Like An Artist" has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The Wall Street Journal. He speaks about creativity, visual thinking, and being an artist online for organizations such as SXSW and The Economist.
About TEDx
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

19:22

How to Draw Faces

How to Draw Faces

How to Draw Faces

Learn how to draw faces step by step from scratch. In this tutorial, you'll learn how to draw male and female faces. I'll also demonstrate how to transform your characters by making simple changes.
UPDATE: After receiving a lot of feedback about the speed of this video, I'm going to re-upload it so it's a lot slower for beginners and include a few more details in my instruction. Thanks for all your feedback guys!
Requested by: WendyNelson :)
Written version of this tutorial: http://rapidfireart.com/2017/10/24/how-to-draw-faces-for-beginners-easy/
TOOLS I USED (click the link above to see where you can buy them)
- Canson SketchPaper
- 2B DerwentGraphicPencil (I recommend HB for light sketching)
- Random 0.7mm HB pencil (usually use 0.5mm Pentel Ain but I couldn't find it anywhere)
- Prismacolor Kneaded Eraser
- PlasticMono Eraser
- Transparent Ruler
SKIP TO...
How to draw a male face: 0:10
Male...
Eyes: 1:19
Nose: 2:13
Lips: 2:42
Hair: 3:38
Ears: 4:20
Cheeks, Jaw, Chin: 4:42
Neck: 5:09
Male - First transformation: 5:21
How to draw a female face: 7:51
female...
Eyes: 8:44
Nose: 9:32
Lips: 10:02
Ears: 10:42
Hair: 10:56
Neck: 11:33
Female - First transformation: 11:39
RELATED TUTORIALS
How to draw hair: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGcOEkl1coU&lc=UgyllYF61K9eLQ5H0ZZ4AaABAg
How to draw a pair of eyes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs4fSe-hSIk&t=25s
How to draw noses: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DeFv3pg_Fxk&t=25s
How to draw lips: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFVTfgXDBWg
How to draw 6 different eye shapes: http://rapidfireart.com/2017/01/19/how-to-draw-different-eye-shapes/
How to shade a faces:
http://rapidfireart.com/2016/08/09/how-to-shade-a-face/
FOLLOW ME HERE:
Website: www.rapidfireart.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/RapidFireArtTutorials
MUSIC USED:
(These are affiliate links to AudioJungle)
https://goo.gl/KYX24o
https://goo.gl/azBBsW
https://goo.gl/f4xmaF

What DMT is like - DMT Trip Simulation (1080p)

22 Most Unbelievable Body Art Illusions

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks for watching!
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
15 - Painters Paradise…
This is another surreal piece of work from AnnieRalli, whom we mentioned earlier… this stunning illusion is created with lots of patience, love and creativity. Annie used to be a BBC scenic artist where she worked for 10 years.
14 - Art has no rules…
And Chooo-San knows that only too well. This is another one of her incredible creations. Chooo-San only uses acrylic paints to create these inventive body art designs and she discovered she had a talent when she was doodling eyes on the back of her hands whilst taking breaks from her studies.
13 - Your body is my canvas…
So, says Alexa Meade, an installation artist from America. She paints portraits directly on to bodies, and somehow manages to lose the depth of the subjects to make everything 2d. She initially thought she would go into politics, but aren’t you glad she didn’t? She’s worked on projects all around the world!
12 - Eye opening…
Or in this illusion, mouth opening! This is one designed by Swedish make-up artist Sandra Holmborm, perfectly placed eyebrows and an iris that seems to pull you in, this creation is enough to freak anyone out!
11 - Hard to focus…
This crazy illusion has been recreated by a few people, and the results are always the same… one battles to actually look at it without scrunching up one’s eyes, or trying to close one eye to view it properly. This is one you have to try at your next Halloween.
10 - No humans were harmed…
In the making of this video… This is a special piece created by Jonathan Harris, who has around 600 000 YouTube subscribers, who love watching him create the most insane art on his hand! He calls it, Cool 3D trick art optical illusion”
9 - Piece of work…
I would love to know how long it takes for these make-up artists to put together their incredible pieces. This is just upping the Halloween make-up level to the top, where most of us would never, ever be able to reach! I actually feel sorry for the little kids who meet her in the street!
8 - Just Face It…
She’s talented! This is Dain Yoon, a college student from South Korea where she is studying art. She uses her face as her canvas, and her inspiration is the complexity of human beings. It can sometimes take around 12-hours to complete one of her projects.
7 - Cats out the bag…
This beautiful tiger was created using 3 people to provide the canvas, so you can only image how massive this was and how still those 3 models had to sit, whilst the artist prepared their bodies for this amazing project.
6 - Fright Night…
After watching a video like this, you really gain a whole new appreciation for these talented artists, don’t you?
5 - Wooden Doll comes to life…
This mind-blowing illusion was created by Mirjana Kika Milosevic, a make-up artist from Serbia. This wooden puppet doll won her internet fame and the “national NYXFaceAwards competition” in the category for optical illusions.
4 - See it to believe it…
Here’s another stunning creation from Jonathan Harris, and he really does make the creating of this super illusion so easy. He has won many awards for his incredible work, and his videos are surreal to watch.
3 - Through the looking glass…
You can imagine these designs in something like Alice in Wonderland. This was done by NatalieFletcher from Oregon, who creates very unusual illusions on male torsos. Some of her designs look like there’s things moving underneath the surface of the skin, while others look like a deep hole into nothingness!
2 - Look again…
It does sort of look like this car is melting, which already is a bit unusual… but take a closer look and see how the people have been transformed into this vehicle.
1 - Just an illusion…
We wrap it up with one last piece from Chooo-San, and be thankful that this one is just an illusion. Because seriously, the thought of a little man being stowed away in a pouch like a Joey on one’s stomach, is just not a very good thought at all, wouldn’t you agree?

11:07

How to Draw the Figure from the Imagination - Part 1 - Fine Art-Tips.

How to Draw the Figure from the Imagination - Part 1 - Fine Art-Tips.

How to Draw the Figure from the Imagination - Part 1 - Fine Art-Tips.

Visit my FB: https://www.facebook.com/LeonardoPereznieto
List of Materials:
Lead Holder (2mm leads), red. - See it here http://amzn.to/2kt5JAs
HB 2mm leads. See them here: http://amzn.to/2jWgVCo
Lead pointer - See it here: http://amzn.to/2ktexWH
Paper: Fabriano Ecological Drawing Pad, 8-1/4 X 11-3/4, white -. See it here: http://amzn.to/2jx7hKl
Visit my website: http://www.artistleonardo.com/
FollowFineArt Tips on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/102704788338918986617/+FineArtEBooks/posts
Visit: http://www.fineartebooks.com/ for free drawing tutorials.
If you would like to invest in a drawing, painting or sculpture by Leonardo Pereznieto, please write to: info@leonardopereznieto.com
You may also follow me on:
My Blog: http://www.fineartebooks.com/howtodraw_drawingschool/My_Blog/My_Blog.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/ArtistLeonardo
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=89957576&trk=tab_pro
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/100373866809472929876/posts
VK: http://vk.com/leonardopereznieto
Leonardo Pereznieto: http://www.leonardopereznieto.com/leo/Intro.html
Do you want to help me translating it into your language?
(Note: First check if it hasn´t been translated already by pressing the "CC" button on the lower part of the video).
All you need to do is translate the file at the link below and send it to me:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0UOw8r7hWG2eWE2Z2c5a1JGdXM/edit
With this video I’ll teach you how to draw a figure from the imagination and the memory. I’ll show you how to do the basic structure of the boy in a simple and easy way, to draw a realistic person with movement. You’ll learn which basic bones are important to crate the physical structure and know how to apply gesture lines in order to imitate the movement of the body.
¡To draw a figure from the mind you should have a basic knowledge of anatomies in order to mimetic it!
Как нарисовать фигуру из воображения
Как нарисовать фигуру с ума
как нарисовать рисунок по памяти
Comment dessiner un personnage avec l'imagination
كيف ترسم جسم الانسان من خيالك
Come disegnare la figura umana a memoria
Come disegnare la figura umana dall'immaginazione
如何绘画想象中的人物
Eine Figur aus der Phantasie
Cum sa desenezi o figura din imaginatie
Як намалювати фігуру з уяви
Ինչպես նկարել մարդկային կերպար պատկերացումով, մաս 1
கற்பனையில் இருந்து உருவம் வரைவது எப்படி
Sådan tegner du en figur udfra din forstilling

14:33

Can an Artificial Intelligence Create Art?

Can an Artificial Intelligence Create Art?

Can an Artificial Intelligence Create Art?

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
IdeaChannelFacebook! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelfacebook
Talk about this episode on reddit! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelreddit
Idea Channel IRC! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelirc
Email us! pbsideachannel [at] gmail [dot] com
Support Idea Channel on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/pbsideachannel
Our AI Generated Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p10knivMRg
From drawing machines to early digital art and now AI, we’ve wondered whether the fundamentally human seeming endeavor of ART MAKING can be done by machines. At Idea Channel, we think the answer is unequivocally, yes! Perhaps the better question would be, will we ever let machines make art on their own? Will we ever be able to scrub away the influence and bias of the humans that created the machines making said art? And if so, how will we respond to the art being made by machines? How will it be appreciated? Will AI produced works ever be treated as art is traditionally treated–widely traded, curated, collected, critiqued? Let us know what you think in the comments below!
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http://bit.ly/1U8fS1B
T-Shirts Designed by:
http://artsparrow.com/
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TWEET OF THE WEEK:
https://twitter.com/darcypaynter/status/748059272236269568
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
FURTHER READING & SOURCES:
http://www.footnotes.pbsideachannel.com
http://footnotes.pbsideachannel.com/list-sources-on-ai-and-creativity/
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
ASSET LINKS:
Assets in this episode can be found listed in this Google Doc!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12wEhlV4ogddgNW-THDZNhGzdSCWspddxIZba3wq-40k/edit?usp=sharing
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­-------------------------­-­-­-
MUSIC at 2:40
Monotone - Minimalist
https://soundcloud.com/montone-2/minimalist
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
Written and hosted by Mike Rugnetta (@mikerugnetta)
(who also has a podcast! Reasonably Sound: http://bit.ly/1sCn0BF)
Made by Kornhaber Brown (http://www.kornhaberbrown.com)

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

2:07:43

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
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Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

0:47

Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Check out First SoloistCrystal Costa performing in Aszure Barton's Fantastic Beings, which returns as part of Voices of America.
More Info/Book tickets ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk/voices
Subscribe for more videos ⟶ http://bit.ly/2hZtle8
Originally created as part of English National Ballet’s She Said programme in 2016, Fantastic Beings is a vigorous, energetic work for 16 dancers, accompanied by Mason Bates’s dynamic score performed live by English National Ballet Philharmonic.
––––––––––––––––
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk
Facebook ⟶ http://facebook.com/englishnationalballet
Twitter ⟶ https://twitter.com/enballet
Instagram ⟶ http://instagram.com/englishnationalballet
Soundcloud ⟶ https://soundcloud.com/english-national-ballet
––––––––––––––––
English National Ballet is an award-winning company that brings world-class classical ballet to the widest possible audience.
We are bold and ambitious, and under the leadership of Artistic Director, Tamara Rojo, our aim is to honour the tradition of great classical ballet while embracing change, evolving the art form for future generations.
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk

Steal Like An Artist: Austin Kleon at TEDxKC

Austin Kleon's talk "Steal Like An Artist" is a creative manifesto based on 10 things he wish he'd heard when he was starting out. Austin is a writer and artist. He's the author of Newspaper Blackout, a best-selling book of poetry made by redacting newspaper articles with a permanent marker. Austin's talk was delivered as part of the TEDxKC presentation of TEDxChange.
Austin's work (including his new book) "Steal Like An Artist" has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The Wall Street Journal. He speaks about creativity, visual thinking, and being an artist online for organizations such as SXSW and The Economist.
About TEDx
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like ex...

published: 24 Apr 2012

How to Draw Faces

Learn how to draw faces step by step from scratch. In this tutorial, you'll learn how to draw male and female faces. I'll also demonstrate how to transform your characters by making simple changes.
UPDATE: After receiving a lot of feedback about the speed of this video, I'm going to re-upload it so it's a lot slower for beginners and include a few more details in my instruction. Thanks for all your feedback guys!
Requested by: WendyNelson :)
Written version of this tutorial: http://rapidfireart.com/2017/10/24/how-to-draw-faces-for-beginners-easy/
TOOLS I USED (click the link above to see where you can buy them)
- Canson SketchPaper
- 2B DerwentGraphicPencil (I recommend HB for light sketching)
- Random 0.7mm HB pencil (usually use 0.5mm Pentel Ain but I couldn't find it anywhere)
...

Beautiful Water Painting

What DMT is like - DMT Trip Simulation (1080p)

22 Most Unbelievable Body Art Illusions

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks for watching!
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
15 - Painters Paradise…
This is another surreal piece of work from AnnieRalli, whom we mentioned earlier… this stunning illusion is created with lots of patience, love and creativity. Annie used to be a BBC scenic artist where she worked for 10 years.
14 - Art has no rules…
And Chooo-San knows that only too well. This is another one of her incredible creations. Chooo-San only uses acrylic paints to create these inventive body art designs and she discovered she had a talent when she was doodling eyes on the back of her hands whilst taking breaks from her studies.
...

Can an Artificial Intelligence Create Art?

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
IdeaChannelFacebook! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelfacebook
Talk about this episode on reddit! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelreddit
Idea Channel IRC! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelirc
Email us! pbsideachannel [at] gmail [dot] com
Support Idea Channel on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/pbsideachannel
Our AI Generated Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p10knivMRg
From drawing machines to early digital art and now AI, we’ve wondered whether the fundamentally human seeming endeavor of ART MAKING can be done by machines. At Idea Channel, we think the answer is unequivocally, yes! Perhaps the better question would be, will we ever let machines make art on their own? Will we ever be able to scrub away th...

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based ...

published: 05 Dec 2017

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the m...

published: 10 Nov 2015

Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Check out First SoloistCrystal Costa performing in Aszure Barton's Fantastic Beings, which returns as part of Voices of America.
More Info/Book tickets ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk/voices
Subscribe for more videos ⟶ http://bit.ly/2hZtle8
Originally created as part of English National Ballet’s She Said programme in 2016, Fantastic Beings is a vigorous, energetic work for 16 dancers, accompanied by Mason Bates’s dynamic score performed live by English National Ballet Philharmonic.
––––––––––––––––
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk
Facebook ⟶ http://facebook.com/englishnationalballet
Twitter ⟶ https://twitter.com/enballet
Instagram ⟶ http://instagram.com/englishnationalballet
Soundcloud ⟶ https://soundcloud.com/english-national-ballet
––––––––––––––––
English National Ballet is an awar...

Austin Kleon's talk "Steal Like An Artist" is a creative manifesto based on 10 things he wish he'd heard when he was starting out. Austin is a writer and artist. He's the author of Newspaper Blackout, a best-selling book of poetry made by redacting newspaper articles with a permanent marker. Austin's talk was delivered as part of the TEDxKC presentation of TEDxChange.
Austin's work (including his new book) "Steal Like An Artist" has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The Wall Street Journal. He speaks about creativity, visual thinking, and being an artist online for organizations such as SXSW and The Economist.
About TEDx
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Austin Kleon's talk "Steal Like An Artist" is a creative manifesto based on 10 things he wish he'd heard when he was starting out. Austin is a writer and artist. He's the author of Newspaper Blackout, a best-selling book of poetry made by redacting newspaper articles with a permanent marker. Austin's talk was delivered as part of the TEDxKC presentation of TEDxChange.
Austin's work (including his new book) "Steal Like An Artist" has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The Wall Street Journal. He speaks about creativity, visual thinking, and being an artist online for organizations such as SXSW and The Economist.
About TEDx
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

22 Most Unbelievable Body Art Illusions

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks f...

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks for watching!
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
15 - Painters Paradise…
This is another surreal piece of work from AnnieRalli, whom we mentioned earlier… this stunning illusion is created with lots of patience, love and creativity. Annie used to be a BBC scenic artist where she worked for 10 years.
14 - Art has no rules…
And Chooo-San knows that only too well. This is another one of her incredible creations. Chooo-San only uses acrylic paints to create these inventive body art designs and she discovered she had a talent when she was doodling eyes on the back of her hands whilst taking breaks from her studies.
13 - Your body is my canvas…
So, says Alexa Meade, an installation artist from America. She paints portraits directly on to bodies, and somehow manages to lose the depth of the subjects to make everything 2d. She initially thought she would go into politics, but aren’t you glad she didn’t? She’s worked on projects all around the world!
12 - Eye opening…
Or in this illusion, mouth opening! This is one designed by Swedish make-up artist Sandra Holmborm, perfectly placed eyebrows and an iris that seems to pull you in, this creation is enough to freak anyone out!
11 - Hard to focus…
This crazy illusion has been recreated by a few people, and the results are always the same… one battles to actually look at it without scrunching up one’s eyes, or trying to close one eye to view it properly. This is one you have to try at your next Halloween.
10 - No humans were harmed…
In the making of this video… This is a special piece created by Jonathan Harris, who has around 600 000 YouTube subscribers, who love watching him create the most insane art on his hand! He calls it, Cool 3D trick art optical illusion”
9 - Piece of work…
I would love to know how long it takes for these make-up artists to put together their incredible pieces. This is just upping the Halloween make-up level to the top, where most of us would never, ever be able to reach! I actually feel sorry for the little kids who meet her in the street!
8 - Just Face It…
She’s talented! This is Dain Yoon, a college student from South Korea where she is studying art. She uses her face as her canvas, and her inspiration is the complexity of human beings. It can sometimes take around 12-hours to complete one of her projects.
7 - Cats out the bag…
This beautiful tiger was created using 3 people to provide the canvas, so you can only image how massive this was and how still those 3 models had to sit, whilst the artist prepared their bodies for this amazing project.
6 - Fright Night…
After watching a video like this, you really gain a whole new appreciation for these talented artists, don’t you?
5 - Wooden Doll comes to life…
This mind-blowing illusion was created by Mirjana Kika Milosevic, a make-up artist from Serbia. This wooden puppet doll won her internet fame and the “national NYXFaceAwards competition” in the category for optical illusions.
4 - See it to believe it…
Here’s another stunning creation from Jonathan Harris, and he really does make the creating of this super illusion so easy. He has won many awards for his incredible work, and his videos are surreal to watch.
3 - Through the looking glass…
You can imagine these designs in something like Alice in Wonderland. This was done by NatalieFletcher from Oregon, who creates very unusual illusions on male torsos. Some of her designs look like there’s things moving underneath the surface of the skin, while others look like a deep hole into nothingness!
2 - Look again…
It does sort of look like this car is melting, which already is a bit unusual… but take a closer look and see how the people have been transformed into this vehicle.
1 - Just an illusion…
We wrap it up with one last piece from Chooo-San, and be thankful that this one is just an illusion. Because seriously, the thought of a little man being stowed away in a pouch like a Joey on one’s stomach, is just not a very good thought at all, wouldn’t you agree?

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks for watching!
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
15 - Painters Paradise…
This is another surreal piece of work from AnnieRalli, whom we mentioned earlier… this stunning illusion is created with lots of patience, love and creativity. Annie used to be a BBC scenic artist where she worked for 10 years.
14 - Art has no rules…
And Chooo-San knows that only too well. This is another one of her incredible creations. Chooo-San only uses acrylic paints to create these inventive body art designs and she discovered she had a talent when she was doodling eyes on the back of her hands whilst taking breaks from her studies.
13 - Your body is my canvas…
So, says Alexa Meade, an installation artist from America. She paints portraits directly on to bodies, and somehow manages to lose the depth of the subjects to make everything 2d. She initially thought she would go into politics, but aren’t you glad she didn’t? She’s worked on projects all around the world!
12 - Eye opening…
Or in this illusion, mouth opening! This is one designed by Swedish make-up artist Sandra Holmborm, perfectly placed eyebrows and an iris that seems to pull you in, this creation is enough to freak anyone out!
11 - Hard to focus…
This crazy illusion has been recreated by a few people, and the results are always the same… one battles to actually look at it without scrunching up one’s eyes, or trying to close one eye to view it properly. This is one you have to try at your next Halloween.
10 - No humans were harmed…
In the making of this video… This is a special piece created by Jonathan Harris, who has around 600 000 YouTube subscribers, who love watching him create the most insane art on his hand! He calls it, Cool 3D trick art optical illusion”
9 - Piece of work…
I would love to know how long it takes for these make-up artists to put together their incredible pieces. This is just upping the Halloween make-up level to the top, where most of us would never, ever be able to reach! I actually feel sorry for the little kids who meet her in the street!
8 - Just Face It…
She’s talented! This is Dain Yoon, a college student from South Korea where she is studying art. She uses her face as her canvas, and her inspiration is the complexity of human beings. It can sometimes take around 12-hours to complete one of her projects.
7 - Cats out the bag…
This beautiful tiger was created using 3 people to provide the canvas, so you can only image how massive this was and how still those 3 models had to sit, whilst the artist prepared their bodies for this amazing project.
6 - Fright Night…
After watching a video like this, you really gain a whole new appreciation for these talented artists, don’t you?
5 - Wooden Doll comes to life…
This mind-blowing illusion was created by Mirjana Kika Milosevic, a make-up artist from Serbia. This wooden puppet doll won her internet fame and the “national NYXFaceAwards competition” in the category for optical illusions.
4 - See it to believe it…
Here’s another stunning creation from Jonathan Harris, and he really does make the creating of this super illusion so easy. He has won many awards for his incredible work, and his videos are surreal to watch.
3 - Through the looking glass…
You can imagine these designs in something like Alice in Wonderland. This was done by NatalieFletcher from Oregon, who creates very unusual illusions on male torsos. Some of her designs look like there’s things moving underneath the surface of the skin, while others look like a deep hole into nothingness!
2 - Look again…
It does sort of look like this car is melting, which already is a bit unusual… but take a closer look and see how the people have been transformed into this vehicle.
1 - Just an illusion…
We wrap it up with one last piece from Chooo-San, and be thankful that this one is just an illusion. Because seriously, the thought of a little man being stowed away in a pouch like a Joey on one’s stomach, is just not a very good thought at all, wouldn’t you agree?

Visit my FB: https://www.facebook.com/LeonardoPereznieto
List of Materials:
Lead Holder (2mm leads), red. - See it here http://amzn.to/2kt5JAs
HB 2mm leads. See them here: http://amzn.to/2jWgVCo
Lead pointer - See it here: http://amzn.to/2ktexWH
Paper: Fabriano Ecological Drawing Pad, 8-1/4 X 11-3/4, white -. See it here: http://amzn.to/2jx7hKl
Visit my website: http://www.artistleonardo.com/
FollowFineArt Tips on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/102704788338918986617/+FineArtEBooks/posts
Visit: http://www.fineartebooks.com/ for free drawing tutorials.
If you would like to invest in a drawing, painting or sculpture by Leonardo Pereznieto, please write to: info@leonardopereznieto.com
You may also follow me on:
My Blog: http://www.fineartebooks.com/howtodraw_drawingschool/My_Blog/My_Blog.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/ArtistLeonardo
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=89957576&trk=tab_pro
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/100373866809472929876/posts
VK: http://vk.com/leonardopereznieto
Leonardo Pereznieto: http://www.leonardopereznieto.com/leo/Intro.html
Do you want to help me translating it into your language?
(Note: First check if it hasn´t been translated already by pressing the "CC" button on the lower part of the video).
All you need to do is translate the file at the link below and send it to me:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0UOw8r7hWG2eWE2Z2c5a1JGdXM/edit
With this video I’ll teach you how to draw a figure from the imagination and the memory. I’ll show you how to do the basic structure of the boy in a simple and easy way, to draw a realistic person with movement. You’ll learn which basic bones are important to crate the physical structure and know how to apply gesture lines in order to imitate the movement of the body.
¡To draw a figure from the mind you should have a basic knowledge of anatomies in order to mimetic it!
Как нарисовать фигуру из воображения
Как нарисовать фигуру с ума
как нарисовать рисунок по памяти
Comment dessiner un personnage avec l'imagination
كيف ترسم جسم الانسان من خيالك
Come disegnare la figura umana a memoria
Come disegnare la figura umana dall'immaginazione
如何绘画想象中的人物
Eine Figur aus der Phantasie
Cum sa desenezi o figura din imaginatie
Як намалювати фігуру з уяви
Ինչպես նկարել մարդկային կերպար պատկերացումով, մաս 1
கற்பனையில் இருந்து உருவம் வரைவது எப்படி
Sådan tegner du en figur udfra din forstilling

Visit my FB: https://www.facebook.com/LeonardoPereznieto
List of Materials:
Lead Holder (2mm leads), red. - See it here http://amzn.to/2kt5JAs
HB 2mm leads. See them here: http://amzn.to/2jWgVCo
Lead pointer - See it here: http://amzn.to/2ktexWH
Paper: Fabriano Ecological Drawing Pad, 8-1/4 X 11-3/4, white -. See it here: http://amzn.to/2jx7hKl
Visit my website: http://www.artistleonardo.com/
FollowFineArt Tips on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/102704788338918986617/+FineArtEBooks/posts
Visit: http://www.fineartebooks.com/ for free drawing tutorials.
If you would like to invest in a drawing, painting or sculpture by Leonardo Pereznieto, please write to: info@leonardopereznieto.com
You may also follow me on:
My Blog: http://www.fineartebooks.com/howtodraw_drawingschool/My_Blog/My_Blog.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/ArtistLeonardo
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=89957576&trk=tab_pro
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/100373866809472929876/posts
VK: http://vk.com/leonardopereznieto
Leonardo Pereznieto: http://www.leonardopereznieto.com/leo/Intro.html
Do you want to help me translating it into your language?
(Note: First check if it hasn´t been translated already by pressing the "CC" button on the lower part of the video).
All you need to do is translate the file at the link below and send it to me:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0UOw8r7hWG2eWE2Z2c5a1JGdXM/edit
With this video I’ll teach you how to draw a figure from the imagination and the memory. I’ll show you how to do the basic structure of the boy in a simple and easy way, to draw a realistic person with movement. You’ll learn which basic bones are important to crate the physical structure and know how to apply gesture lines in order to imitate the movement of the body.
¡To draw a figure from the mind you should have a basic knowledge of anatomies in order to mimetic it!
Как нарисовать фигуру из воображения
Как нарисовать фигуру с ума
как нарисовать рисунок по памяти
Comment dessiner un personnage avec l'imagination
كيف ترسم جسم الانسان من خيالك
Come disegnare la figura umana a memoria
Come disegnare la figura umana dall'immaginazione
如何绘画想象中的人物
Eine Figur aus der Phantasie
Cum sa desenezi o figura din imaginatie
Як намалювати фігуру з уяви
Ինչպես նկարել մարդկային կերպար պատկերացումով, մաս 1
கற்பனையில் இருந்து உருவம் வரைவது எப்படி
Sådan tegner du en figur udfra din forstilling

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
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Our AI Generated Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p10knivMRg
From drawing machines to early digital art and now AI, we’ve wondered whether the fundamentally human seeming endeavor of ART MAKING can be done by machines. At Idea Channel, we think the answer is unequivocally, yes! Perhaps the better question would be, will we ever let machines make art on their own? Will we ever be able to scrub away the influence and bias of the humans that created the machines making said art? And if so, how will we respond to the art being made by machines? How will it be appreciated? Will AI produced works ever be treated as art is traditionally treated–widely traded, curated, collected, critiqued? Let us know what you think in the comments below!
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TWEET OF THE WEEK:
https://twitter.com/darcypaynter/status/748059272236269568
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FURTHER READING & SOURCES:
http://www.footnotes.pbsideachannel.com
http://footnotes.pbsideachannel.com/list-sources-on-ai-and-creativity/
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ASSET LINKS:
Assets in this episode can be found listed in this Google Doc!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12wEhlV4ogddgNW-THDZNhGzdSCWspddxIZba3wq-40k/edit?usp=sharing
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MUSIC at 2:40
Monotone - Minimalist
https://soundcloud.com/montone-2/minimalist
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Written and hosted by Mike Rugnetta (@mikerugnetta)
(who also has a podcast! Reasonably Sound: http://bit.ly/1sCn0BF)
Made by Kornhaber Brown (http://www.kornhaberbrown.com)

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
IdeaChannelFacebook! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelfacebook
Talk about this episode on reddit! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelreddit
Idea Channel IRC! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelirc
Email us! pbsideachannel [at] gmail [dot] com
Support Idea Channel on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/pbsideachannel
Our AI Generated Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p10knivMRg
From drawing machines to early digital art and now AI, we’ve wondered whether the fundamentally human seeming endeavor of ART MAKING can be done by machines. At Idea Channel, we think the answer is unequivocally, yes! Perhaps the better question would be, will we ever let machines make art on their own? Will we ever be able to scrub away the influence and bias of the humans that created the machines making said art? And if so, how will we respond to the art being made by machines? How will it be appreciated? Will AI produced works ever be treated as art is traditionally treated–widely traded, curated, collected, critiqued? Let us know what you think in the comments below!
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
CHECK OUT OUR MERCH!
http://bit.ly/1U8fS1B
T-Shirts Designed by:
http://artsparrow.com/
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
TWEET OF THE WEEK:
https://twitter.com/darcypaynter/status/748059272236269568
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
FURTHER READING & SOURCES:
http://www.footnotes.pbsideachannel.com
http://footnotes.pbsideachannel.com/list-sources-on-ai-and-creativity/
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
ASSET LINKS:
Assets in this episode can be found listed in this Google Doc!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12wEhlV4ogddgNW-THDZNhGzdSCWspddxIZba3wq-40k/edit?usp=sharing
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­-------------------------­-­-­-
MUSIC at 2:40
Monotone - Minimalist
https://soundcloud.com/montone-2/minimalist
----------------------------------------­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­------------------------­-­-­-­-
Written and hosted by Mike Rugnetta (@mikerugnetta)
(who also has a podcast! Reasonably Sound: http://bit.ly/1sCn0BF)
Made by Kornhaber Brown (http://www.kornhaberbrown.com)

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an en...

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
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Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnFromMasters/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

published:10 Nov 2015

views:53255

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Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Check out First SoloistCrystal Costa performing in Aszure Barton's Fantastic Beings, which returns as part of Voices of America.
More Info/Book tickets ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk/voices
Subscribe for more videos ⟶ http://bit.ly/2hZtle8
Originally created as part of English National Ballet’s She Said programme in 2016, Fantastic Beings is a vigorous, energetic work for 16 dancers, accompanied by Mason Bates’s dynamic score performed live by English National Ballet Philharmonic.
––––––––––––––––
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk
Facebook ⟶ http://facebook.com/englishnationalballet
Twitter ⟶ https://twitter.com/enballet
Instagram ⟶ http://instagram.com/englishnationalballet
Soundcloud ⟶ https://soundcloud.com/english-national-ballet
––––––––––––––––
English National Ballet is an award-winning company that brings world-class classical ballet to the widest possible audience.
We are bold and ambitious, and under the leadership of Artistic Director, Tamara Rojo, our aim is to honour the tradition of great classical ballet while embracing change, evolving the art form for future generations.
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk

Check out First SoloistCrystal Costa performing in Aszure Barton's Fantastic Beings, which returns as part of Voices of America.
More Info/Book tickets ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk/voices
Subscribe for more videos ⟶ http://bit.ly/2hZtle8
Originally created as part of English National Ballet’s She Said programme in 2016, Fantastic Beings is a vigorous, energetic work for 16 dancers, accompanied by Mason Bates’s dynamic score performed live by English National Ballet Philharmonic.
––––––––––––––––
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk
Facebook ⟶ http://facebook.com/englishnationalballet
Twitter ⟶ https://twitter.com/enballet
Instagram ⟶ http://instagram.com/englishnationalballet
Soundcloud ⟶ https://soundcloud.com/english-national-ballet
––––––––––––––––
English National Ballet is an award-winning company that brings world-class classical ballet to the widest possible audience.
We are bold and ambitious, and under the leadership of Artistic Director, Tamara Rojo, our aim is to honour the tradition of great classical ballet while embracing change, evolving the art form for future generations.
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk

What DMT is like - DMT Trip Simulation (1080p)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the m...

Leon Botstein, Conductor / President of Bard College
President Leon Botstein of Bard College steps boldly into the fray to answer one of the most enduring human questions: What is art? This discussion spills over into debates about art's value to society ---- whether access to the arts is right as basic as education or health care, and whether it should be assessed and supported by government or left to the "invisible hand" of the free market. President Botstein explains why it is essential to ask these questions and offers a sturdy basis for evaluating them. He goes so far as to suggest that engaging with art can give our lives meaning and purpose. ﻿
The Floating UniversityOriginally released September 2011.
Additional Lectures:
Michio Kaku: The Universe in a Nutshellhttp://www.youtu...

published: 10 Oct 2012

Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet: Nourishing Heart and Body through Art

World-renowned choreographer Alonzo King, and four artists from his international touring company, demonstrate “what the body is” and how ideas can be communicated through physical language. They offer new insights into artistic obsession and the emphasis on the mind and the heart dancing the bodily instrument. A choreographed performance will be followed by a conversation with Alonzo King highlighting the importance of art in developing wholeness — both in human beings and in communities.

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based ...

published: 05 Dec 2017

The Art of Listening - Music Documentary (2017)

The Art of Listening is a documentary film about the journey music takes to reach a listener’s ear, from the intent of an instrument maker and composer, to the producers and engineers who capture and preserve an artist’s voice. This journey is narrated by intimate conversations with artists, engineers and producers about the philosophy of their work and the intent behind each musical note they create.
This film is an invitation for music fans to rediscover the intricacies and details available in the sounds of their favorite recordings. The Art of Listening is the beginning of a conversation of how the quality of our listening experiences define the medium.
Find out more and listen to the soundtrack at www.theartoflisteningfilm.com
Directed by:
Michael Coleman
www.colemanfilm.com
Emma...

published: 22 Feb 2017

Human Beings Were Never Born to Read: Science of the Reading Brain (2007)

Proust was involved in writing and publishing from an early age. In addition to the literary magazines with which he was associated, and in which he published while at school (La Revue verte and La Revue lilas), from 1890 to 1891 he published a regular society column in the journal Le Mensuel.[5] In 1892 he was involved in founding a literary review called Le Banquet (also the French title of Plato's Symposium), and throughout the next several years Proust published small pieces regularly in this journal and in the prestigious La Revue Blanche.
In 1896 Les Plaisirs et les Jours, a compendium of many of these early pieces, was published. The book included a foreword by Anatole France, drawings by Mme Lemaire in whose salon Proust was a frequent guest, and who inspired Proust's Mme Verdurin...

Conversations | Curator Talk | I was Raised on the Internet

Curators from three major institutions collaborating on exhibitions which focus on parallel aspects of the internet’s effect on contemporary art discuss how art and communication have developed since 1989. Each of these three exhibitions investigates the effects of the internet through research and exhibitions: Art in the Age of the Internet at ICA, Boston; The Body Electric at Walker Art Center, Minn. and I was Raised on the Internet at MCAChicago. The panel debates how the internet has radically changed the field of art production, distribution, and reception, and explores the following questions: what is the effect on our relationship to bodies, race, gender, and sexuality? How has all digital media changed the way human beings relate to each other? What can we expect from future gener...

published: 20 Dec 2017

Conversations | Arist Talk | Oh the Humanity!

Artist Cécile B. Evans discusses her practice with SusannePfeffer, director of the MuseumFridericianum and curator of the German pavilion at this year's Venice Biennale. This talk, titled after Herbert Oglevee’s historic 1937 quote on the Hindenburg disaster, considers man's relationship to technology. In her work, Evans examines the influence of technologies on human beings and how the contemporary human condition is shaped by the person-to-machine exchange. Evans will expand on her current projects, the burning questions she is dealing with in her work, and her visions for the future.
Cécile B. Evans, Artist, London, in conversation with Susanne Pfeffer, Director, Fridericianum, Kassel, and Curator, German Pavilion, 57th Venice Biennale.
Saturday, June 17 2017, 4pm - 5pm
Filmed on s...

published: 04 Jul 2017

HOW TO ANALYZE PEOPLE ON SIGHT - FULL AudioBook - Human Analysis, Psychology, Body Language

How To Analyze People On Sight - FULL Audio Book - by Elsie Lincoln Benedict & RalphPain Benedict - HumanAnalysis, Psychology, Body Language - In this popular American book from the 1920s, "self-help" author Elsie Lincoln Benedict makes pseudo-scientific claims of Human Analysis, proposing that all humans fit into specific five sub-types. Supposedly based on evolutionary theory, it is claimed that distinctive traits can be foretold through analysis of outward appearance. While not considered to be a serious work by the scientific community, "How To Analyze People On Sight" makes for an entertaining read.
.
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published: 05 Nov 2012

Prof. Elliot W. Eisner: "What Do the Arts Teach?"

Watch video of Elliot W. Eisner, Lee JacksProfessor of Education and professor of art at Stanford University, speaking in September 2006 on "What Do the Arts Teach?" The speech was the second of the 2006-2007 Chancellors Lecture Series and part of Vanderbilts annual Family Weekend.
In his lecture, "What Do the Arts Teach?," Eisner explored the ways in which the process of thinking and creating artistically can and should be used to improve educational practice in every discipline. He argued that that the distinctive forms of thinking needed to create artistically crafted work are relevant not only to what students do, but also to virtually all aspects of what educators do from the design of curricula, to the practice of teaching, to the features of the environment in which students a...

published: 04 Nov 2009

Conversations | Artist Talk | Artificial Lives

Bangalore-based artist Aparna Rao, part of the collective Pors & Rao, discusses her work and artistic practice with patron Alia Al-Senussi. Rao’s high-tech art installations draw upon her knowledge of mechanical and electronic engineering, programming and manufacturing. The results are a form of 'beings' that incorporate physical movement and responsive behaviors: a typewriter that sends out emails or a camera that, rather than capturing your image, makes you invisible.
Aparna Rao, Artist, Pors & Rao, Bangalore/Zurich, in conversation with Alia Al-Senussi, Art Patron, London.
Thursday, June 15, 2017, 5pm - 6pm.
Filmed on site at Art Basel in Basel 2017.

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnFromMasters/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnFromMasters/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet: Nourishing Heart and Body through Art

World-renowned choreographer Alonzo King, and four artists from his international touring company, demonstrate “what the body is” and how ideas can be communica...

World-renowned choreographer Alonzo King, and four artists from his international touring company, demonstrate “what the body is” and how ideas can be communicated through physical language. They offer new insights into artistic obsession and the emphasis on the mind and the heart dancing the bodily instrument. A choreographed performance will be followed by a conversation with Alonzo King highlighting the importance of art in developing wholeness — both in human beings and in communities.

World-renowned choreographer Alonzo King, and four artists from his international touring company, demonstrate “what the body is” and how ideas can be communicated through physical language. They offer new insights into artistic obsession and the emphasis on the mind and the heart dancing the bodily instrument. A choreographed performance will be followed by a conversation with Alonzo King highlighting the importance of art in developing wholeness — both in human beings and in communities.

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an en...

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

Human Beings Were Never Born to Read: Science of the Reading Brain (2007)

Proust was involved in writing and publishing from an early age. In addition to the literary magazines with which he was associated, and in which he published w...

Proust was involved in writing and publishing from an early age. In addition to the literary magazines with which he was associated, and in which he published while at school (La Revue verte and La Revue lilas), from 1890 to 1891 he published a regular society column in the journal Le Mensuel.[5] In 1892 he was involved in founding a literary review called Le Banquet (also the French title of Plato's Symposium), and throughout the next several years Proust published small pieces regularly in this journal and in the prestigious La Revue Blanche.
In 1896 Les Plaisirs et les Jours, a compendium of many of these early pieces, was published. The book included a foreword by Anatole France, drawings by Mme Lemaire in whose salon Proust was a frequent guest, and who inspired Proust's Mme Verdurin. She invited him and Reynaldo Hahn to her château de Réveillon (the model for Mme Verdurin's La Raspelière) in summer 1894, and for three weeks in 1895. This book was so sumptuously produced that it cost twice the normal price of a book its size.
That year Proust also began working on a novel, which was eventually published in 1952 and titled Jean Santeuil by his posthumous editors. Many of the themes later developed in In Search of Lost Time find their first articulation in this unfinished work, including the enigma of memory and the necessity of reflection; several sections of In Search of Lost Time can be read in the first draft in Jean Santeuil. The portrait of the parents in Jean Santeuil is quite harsh, in marked contrast to the adoration with which the parents are painted in Proust's masterpiece. Following the poor reception of Les Plaisirs et les Jours, and internal troubles with resolving the plot, Proust gradually abandoned Jean Santeuil in 1897 and stopped work on it entirely by 1899.
Beginning in 1895 Proust spent several years reading Carlyle, Emerson, and John Ruskin. Through this reading he refined his theories of art and the role of the artist in society. Also, in Time Regained Proust's universal protagonist recalls having translated Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies. The artist's responsibility is to confront the appearance of nature, deduce its essence and retell or explain that essence in the work of art. Ruskin's view of artistic production was central to this conception, and Ruskin's work was so important to Proust that he claimed to know "by heart" several of Ruskin's books, including The Seven Lamps of Architecture, The Bible of Amiens, and Praeterita.[5]
Proust set out to translate two of Ruskin's works into French, but was hampered by an imperfect command of English. To compensate for this he made his translations a group affair: sketched out by his mother, the drafts were first revised by Proust, then by Marie Nordlinger, the English cousin of his friend and sometime lover[14] Reynaldo Hahn, then finally polished by Proust. Questioned about his method by an editor, Proust responded, "I don't claim to know English; I claim to know Ruskin".[5][15] The Bible of Amiens, with Proust's extended introduction, was published in French in 1904. Both the translation and the introduction were well-reviewed; Henri Bergson called Proust's introduction "an important contribution to the psychology of Ruskin", and had similar praise for the translation.[5] At the time of this publication, Proust was already translating Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, which he completed in June 1905, just before his mother's death, and published in 1906. Literary historians and critics have ascertained that, apart from Ruskin, Proust's chief literary influences included Saint-Simon, Montaigne, Stendhal, Flaubert, George Eliot, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and Leo Tolstoy.
1908 was an important year for Proust's development as a writer. During the first part of the year he published in various journals pastiches of other writers. These exercises in imitation may have allowed Proust to solidify his own style. In addition, in the spring and summer of the year Proust began work on several different fragments of writing that would later coalesce under the working title of Contre Sainte-Beuve. Proust described his efforts in a letter to a friend: "I have in progress: a study on the nobility, a Parisian novel, an essay on Sainte-Beuve and Flaubert, an essay on women, an essay on pederasty (not easy to publish), a study on stained-glass windows, a study on tombstones, a study on the novel".[5]
From these disparate fragments Proust began to shape a novel on which he worked continually during this period. The rough outline of the work centered on a first-person narrator, unable to sleep, who during the night remembers waiting as a child for his mother to come to him in the morning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proust

Proust was involved in writing and publishing from an early age. In addition to the literary magazines with which he was associated, and in which he published while at school (La Revue verte and La Revue lilas), from 1890 to 1891 he published a regular society column in the journal Le Mensuel.[5] In 1892 he was involved in founding a literary review called Le Banquet (also the French title of Plato's Symposium), and throughout the next several years Proust published small pieces regularly in this journal and in the prestigious La Revue Blanche.
In 1896 Les Plaisirs et les Jours, a compendium of many of these early pieces, was published. The book included a foreword by Anatole France, drawings by Mme Lemaire in whose salon Proust was a frequent guest, and who inspired Proust's Mme Verdurin. She invited him and Reynaldo Hahn to her château de Réveillon (the model for Mme Verdurin's La Raspelière) in summer 1894, and for three weeks in 1895. This book was so sumptuously produced that it cost twice the normal price of a book its size.
That year Proust also began working on a novel, which was eventually published in 1952 and titled Jean Santeuil by his posthumous editors. Many of the themes later developed in In Search of Lost Time find their first articulation in this unfinished work, including the enigma of memory and the necessity of reflection; several sections of In Search of Lost Time can be read in the first draft in Jean Santeuil. The portrait of the parents in Jean Santeuil is quite harsh, in marked contrast to the adoration with which the parents are painted in Proust's masterpiece. Following the poor reception of Les Plaisirs et les Jours, and internal troubles with resolving the plot, Proust gradually abandoned Jean Santeuil in 1897 and stopped work on it entirely by 1899.
Beginning in 1895 Proust spent several years reading Carlyle, Emerson, and John Ruskin. Through this reading he refined his theories of art and the role of the artist in society. Also, in Time Regained Proust's universal protagonist recalls having translated Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies. The artist's responsibility is to confront the appearance of nature, deduce its essence and retell or explain that essence in the work of art. Ruskin's view of artistic production was central to this conception, and Ruskin's work was so important to Proust that he claimed to know "by heart" several of Ruskin's books, including The Seven Lamps of Architecture, The Bible of Amiens, and Praeterita.[5]
Proust set out to translate two of Ruskin's works into French, but was hampered by an imperfect command of English. To compensate for this he made his translations a group affair: sketched out by his mother, the drafts were first revised by Proust, then by Marie Nordlinger, the English cousin of his friend and sometime lover[14] Reynaldo Hahn, then finally polished by Proust. Questioned about his method by an editor, Proust responded, "I don't claim to know English; I claim to know Ruskin".[5][15] The Bible of Amiens, with Proust's extended introduction, was published in French in 1904. Both the translation and the introduction were well-reviewed; Henri Bergson called Proust's introduction "an important contribution to the psychology of Ruskin", and had similar praise for the translation.[5] At the time of this publication, Proust was already translating Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, which he completed in June 1905, just before his mother's death, and published in 1906. Literary historians and critics have ascertained that, apart from Ruskin, Proust's chief literary influences included Saint-Simon, Montaigne, Stendhal, Flaubert, George Eliot, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and Leo Tolstoy.
1908 was an important year for Proust's development as a writer. During the first part of the year he published in various journals pastiches of other writers. These exercises in imitation may have allowed Proust to solidify his own style. In addition, in the spring and summer of the year Proust began work on several different fragments of writing that would later coalesce under the working title of Contre Sainte-Beuve. Proust described his efforts in a letter to a friend: "I have in progress: a study on the nobility, a Parisian novel, an essay on Sainte-Beuve and Flaubert, an essay on women, an essay on pederasty (not easy to publish), a study on stained-glass windows, a study on tombstones, a study on the novel".[5]
From these disparate fragments Proust began to shape a novel on which he worked continually during this period. The rough outline of the work centered on a first-person narrator, unable to sleep, who during the night remembers waiting as a child for his mother to come to him in the morning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proust

Director Evan Falbaum spent 12 months in Shreveport, Louisiana with visual artist Nick Cave and captured the profound way in which he delivered his message of change to the Shreveport community. In this new documentary, go behind the scenes to see and hear Nick Cave's “AS IS” project from its beginning in the Shreveport RegionalArts Council boardroom all the way to the premiere of the performance of “AS IS by NICKCAVE.” Featuring hundreds of local artists, musicians, soundsuit dancers, and members of the community working together AS IS.
This project is the culmination of 8 months of filming and 8 months of editing, that began in August 2015, went through the March 2016 performance, and concluded with the premiere of the film in November 2016.
OfficialSelection 2017 New Orleans Film Festival
Now available on Amazon Video:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N4AVR5K/ref=sr_1_1?s=instant-video&ie=UTF8&qid=1481079616&sr=1-1&keywords=as+is+by+nick+cave
Directed and Edited by: Evan Falbaum
Cinematography by: Evan Falbaum & Kemerton Hargrove
Additional Music by: Michael Futreal
Shot in 6K on a Red Epic Dragon with Rokinon Cine DS lenses.
http://www.nickcaveasis.com
http://www.shrevearts.org
http://www/moviesauce.com
https://www.facebook.com/Nick-Cave-Visual-Artist-299253877181/?fref=ts
http://www.jackshainman.com/artists/nick-cave/

Director Evan Falbaum spent 12 months in Shreveport, Louisiana with visual artist Nick Cave and captured the profound way in which he delivered his message of change to the Shreveport community. In this new documentary, go behind the scenes to see and hear Nick Cave's “AS IS” project from its beginning in the Shreveport RegionalArts Council boardroom all the way to the premiere of the performance of “AS IS by NICKCAVE.” Featuring hundreds of local artists, musicians, soundsuit dancers, and members of the community working together AS IS.
This project is the culmination of 8 months of filming and 8 months of editing, that began in August 2015, went through the March 2016 performance, and concluded with the premiere of the film in November 2016.
OfficialSelection 2017 New Orleans Film Festival
Now available on Amazon Video:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N4AVR5K/ref=sr_1_1?s=instant-video&ie=UTF8&qid=1481079616&sr=1-1&keywords=as+is+by+nick+cave
Directed and Edited by: Evan Falbaum
Cinematography by: Evan Falbaum & Kemerton Hargrove
Additional Music by: Michael Futreal
Shot in 6K on a Red Epic Dragon with Rokinon Cine DS lenses.
http://www.nickcaveasis.com
http://www.shrevearts.org
http://www/moviesauce.com
https://www.facebook.com/Nick-Cave-Visual-Artist-299253877181/?fref=ts
http://www.jackshainman.com/artists/nick-cave/

Artist Cécile B. Evans discusses her practice with SusannePfeffer, director of the MuseumFridericianum and curator of the German pavilion at this year's Venice Biennale. This talk, titled after Herbert Oglevee’s historic 1937 quote on the Hindenburg disaster, considers man's relationship to technology. In her work, Evans examines the influence of technologies on human beings and how the contemporary human condition is shaped by the person-to-machine exchange. Evans will expand on her current projects, the burning questions she is dealing with in her work, and her visions for the future.
Cécile B. Evans, Artist, London, in conversation with Susanne Pfeffer, Director, Fridericianum, Kassel, and Curator, German Pavilion, 57th Venice Biennale.
Saturday, June 17 2017, 4pm - 5pm
Filmed on site at ArtBasel in Basel 2017.

Artist Cécile B. Evans discusses her practice with SusannePfeffer, director of the MuseumFridericianum and curator of the German pavilion at this year's Venice Biennale. This talk, titled after Herbert Oglevee’s historic 1937 quote on the Hindenburg disaster, considers man's relationship to technology. In her work, Evans examines the influence of technologies on human beings and how the contemporary human condition is shaped by the person-to-machine exchange. Evans will expand on her current projects, the burning questions she is dealing with in her work, and her visions for the future.
Cécile B. Evans, Artist, London, in conversation with Susanne Pfeffer, Director, Fridericianum, Kassel, and Curator, German Pavilion, 57th Venice Biennale.
Saturday, June 17 2017, 4pm - 5pm
Filmed on site at ArtBasel in Basel 2017.

published:04 Jul 2017

views:943

back

HOW TO ANALYZE PEOPLE ON SIGHT - FULL AudioBook - Human Analysis, Psychology, Body Language

Watch video of Elliot W. Eisner, Lee JacksProfessor of Education and professor of art at Stanford University, speaking in September 2006 on "What Do the Arts Teach?" The speech was the second of the 2006-2007 Chancellors Lecture Series and part of Vanderbilts annual Family Weekend.
In his lecture, "What Do the Arts Teach?," Eisner explored the ways in which the process of thinking and creating artistically can and should be used to improve educational practice in every discipline. He argued that that the distinctive forms of thinking needed to create artistically crafted work are relevant not only to what students do, but also to virtually all aspects of what educators do from the design of curricula, to the practice of teaching, to the features of the environment in which students and teachers live.

Watch video of Elliot W. Eisner, Lee JacksProfessor of Education and professor of art at Stanford University, speaking in September 2006 on "What Do the Arts Teach?" The speech was the second of the 2006-2007 Chancellors Lecture Series and part of Vanderbilts annual Family Weekend.
In his lecture, "What Do the Arts Teach?," Eisner explored the ways in which the process of thinking and creating artistically can and should be used to improve educational practice in every discipline. He argued that that the distinctive forms of thinking needed to create artistically crafted work are relevant not only to what students do, but also to virtually all aspects of what educators do from the design of curricula, to the practice of teaching, to the features of the environment in which students and teachers live.

Bangalore-based artist Aparna Rao, part of the collective Pors & Rao, discusses her work and artistic practice with patron Alia Al-Senussi. Rao’s high-tech art installations draw upon her knowledge of mechanical and electronic engineering, programming and manufacturing. The results are a form of 'beings' that incorporate physical movement and responsive behaviors: a typewriter that sends out emails or a camera that, rather than capturing your image, makes you invisible.
Aparna Rao, Artist, Pors & Rao, Bangalore/Zurich, in conversation with Alia Al-Senussi, Art Patron, London.
Thursday, June 15, 2017, 5pm - 6pm.
Filmed on site at Art Basel in Basel 2017.

Bangalore-based artist Aparna Rao, part of the collective Pors & Rao, discusses her work and artistic practice with patron Alia Al-Senussi. Rao’s high-tech art installations draw upon her knowledge of mechanical and electronic engineering, programming and manufacturing. The results are a form of 'beings' that incorporate physical movement and responsive behaviors: a typewriter that sends out emails or a camera that, rather than capturing your image, makes you invisible.
Aparna Rao, Artist, Pors & Rao, Bangalore/Zurich, in conversation with Alia Al-Senussi, Art Patron, London.
Thursday, June 15, 2017, 5pm - 6pm.
Filmed on site at Art Basel in Basel 2017.

Steal Like An Artist: Austin Kleon at TEDxKC

Austin Kleon's talk "Steal Like An Artist" is a creative manifesto based on 10 things he wish he'd heard when he was starting out. Austin is a writer and artist. He's the author of Newspaper Blackout, a best-selling book of poetry made by redacting newspaper articles with a permanent marker. Austin's talk was delivered as part of the TEDxKC presentation of TEDxChange.
Austin's work (including his new book) "Steal Like An Artist" has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The Wall Street Journal. He speaks about creativity, visual thinking, and being an artist online for organizations such as SXSW and The Economist.
About TEDx
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

19:22

How to Draw Faces

Learn how to draw faces step by step from scratch. In this tutorial, you'll learn how to d...

22 Most Unbelievable Body Art Illusions

Which of these illusions was your favourite? Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to our channel for more intriguing videos just like this – thanks for watching!
Subscribe to Talltanic http://goo.gl/wgfvrr
15 - Painters Paradise…
This is another surreal piece of work from AnnieRalli, whom we mentioned earlier… this stunning illusion is created with lots of patience, love and creativity. Annie used to be a BBC scenic artist where she worked for 10 years.
14 - Art has no rules…
And Chooo-San knows that only too well. This is another one of her incredible creations. Chooo-San only uses acrylic paints to create these inventive body art designs and she discovered she had a talent when she was doodling eyes on the back of her hands whilst taking breaks from her studies.
13 - Your body is my canvas…
So, says Alexa Meade, an installation artist from America. She paints portraits directly on to bodies, and somehow manages to lose the depth of the subjects to make everything 2d. She initially thought she would go into politics, but aren’t you glad she didn’t? She’s worked on projects all around the world!
12 - Eye opening…
Or in this illusion, mouth opening! This is one designed by Swedish make-up artist Sandra Holmborm, perfectly placed eyebrows and an iris that seems to pull you in, this creation is enough to freak anyone out!
11 - Hard to focus…
This crazy illusion has been recreated by a few people, and the results are always the same… one battles to actually look at it without scrunching up one’s eyes, or trying to close one eye to view it properly. This is one you have to try at your next Halloween.
10 - No humans were harmed…
In the making of this video… This is a special piece created by Jonathan Harris, who has around 600 000 YouTube subscribers, who love watching him create the most insane art on his hand! He calls it, Cool 3D trick art optical illusion”
9 - Piece of work…
I would love to know how long it takes for these make-up artists to put together their incredible pieces. This is just upping the Halloween make-up level to the top, where most of us would never, ever be able to reach! I actually feel sorry for the little kids who meet her in the street!
8 - Just Face It…
She’s talented! This is Dain Yoon, a college student from South Korea where she is studying art. She uses her face as her canvas, and her inspiration is the complexity of human beings. It can sometimes take around 12-hours to complete one of her projects.
7 - Cats out the bag…
This beautiful tiger was created using 3 people to provide the canvas, so you can only image how massive this was and how still those 3 models had to sit, whilst the artist prepared their bodies for this amazing project.
6 - Fright Night…
After watching a video like this, you really gain a whole new appreciation for these talented artists, don’t you?
5 - Wooden Doll comes to life…
This mind-blowing illusion was created by Mirjana Kika Milosevic, a make-up artist from Serbia. This wooden puppet doll won her internet fame and the “national NYXFaceAwards competition” in the category for optical illusions.
4 - See it to believe it…
Here’s another stunning creation from Jonathan Harris, and he really does make the creating of this super illusion so easy. He has won many awards for his incredible work, and his videos are surreal to watch.
3 - Through the looking glass…
You can imagine these designs in something like Alice in Wonderland. This was done by NatalieFletcher from Oregon, who creates very unusual illusions on male torsos. Some of her designs look like there’s things moving underneath the surface of the skin, while others look like a deep hole into nothingness!
2 - Look again…
It does sort of look like this car is melting, which already is a bit unusual… but take a closer look and see how the people have been transformed into this vehicle.
1 - Just an illusion…
We wrap it up with one last piece from Chooo-San, and be thankful that this one is just an illusion. Because seriously, the thought of a little man being stowed away in a pouch like a Joey on one’s stomach, is just not a very good thought at all, wouldn’t you agree?

How to Draw the Figure from the Imagination - Part 1 - Fine Art-Tips.

Visit my FB: https://www.facebook.com/LeonardoPereznieto
List of Materials:
Lead Holder (2mm leads), red. - See it here http://amzn.to/2kt5JAs
HB 2mm leads. See them here: http://amzn.to/2jWgVCo
Lead pointer - See it here: http://amzn.to/2ktexWH
Paper: Fabriano Ecological Drawing Pad, 8-1/4 X 11-3/4, white -. See it here: http://amzn.to/2jx7hKl
Visit my website: http://www.artistleonardo.com/
FollowFineArt Tips on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/102704788338918986617/+FineArtEBooks/posts
Visit: http://www.fineartebooks.com/ for free drawing tutorials.
If you would like to invest in a drawing, painting or sculpture by Leonardo Pereznieto, please write to: info@leonardopereznieto.com
You may also follow me on:
My Blog: http://www.fineartebooks.com/howtodraw_drawingschool/My_Blog/My_Blog.html
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Leonardo Pereznieto: http://www.leonardopereznieto.com/leo/Intro.html
Do you want to help me translating it into your language?
(Note: First check if it hasn´t been translated already by pressing the "CC" button on the lower part of the video).
All you need to do is translate the file at the link below and send it to me:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0UOw8r7hWG2eWE2Z2c5a1JGdXM/edit
With this video I’ll teach you how to draw a figure from the imagination and the memory. I’ll show you how to do the basic structure of the boy in a simple and easy way, to draw a realistic person with movement. You’ll learn which basic bones are important to crate the physical structure and know how to apply gesture lines in order to imitate the movement of the body.
¡To draw a figure from the mind you should have a basic knowledge of anatomies in order to mimetic it!
Как нарисовать фигуру из воображения
Как нарисовать фигуру с ума
как нарисовать рисунок по памяти
Comment dessiner un personnage avec l'imagination
كيف ترسم جسم الانسان من خيالك
Come disegnare la figura umana a memoria
Come disegnare la figura umana dall'immaginazione
如何绘画想象中的人物
Eine Figur aus der Phantasie
Cum sa desenezi o figura din imaginatie
Як намалювати фігуру з уяви
Ինչպես նկարել մարդկային կերպար պատկերացումով, մաս 1
கற்பனையில் இருந்து உருவம் வரைவது எப்படி
Sådan tegner du en figur udfra din forstilling

14:33

Can an Artificial Intelligence Create Art?

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
Id...

Can an Artificial Intelligence Create Art?

Is there ART in Artificial Intelligence?
Tweet us! http://bit.ly/pbsideachanneltwitter
IdeaChannelFacebook! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelfacebook
Talk about this episode on reddit! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelreddit
Idea Channel IRC! http://bit.ly/pbsideachannelirc
Email us! pbsideachannel [at] gmail [dot] com
Support Idea Channel on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/pbsideachannel
Our AI Generated Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p10knivMRg
From drawing machines to early digital art and now AI, we’ve wondered whether the fundamentally human seeming endeavor of ART MAKING can be done by machines. At Idea Channel, we think the answer is unequivocally, yes! Perhaps the better question would be, will we ever let machines make art on their own? Will we ever be able to scrub away the influence and bias of the humans that created the machines making said art? And if so, how will we respond to the art being made by machines? How will it be appreciated? Will AI produced works ever be treated as art is traditionally treated–widely traded, curated, collected, critiqued? Let us know what you think in the comments below!
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T-Shirts Designed by:
http://artsparrow.com/
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TWEET OF THE WEEK:
https://twitter.com/darcypaynter/status/748059272236269568
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FURTHER READING & SOURCES:
http://www.footnotes.pbsideachannel.com
http://footnotes.pbsideachannel.com/list-sources-on-ai-and-creativity/
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ASSET LINKS:
Assets in this episode can be found listed in this Google Doc!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12wEhlV4ogddgNW-THDZNhGzdSCWspddxIZba3wq-40k/edit?usp=sharing
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MUSIC at 2:40
Monotone - Minimalist
https://soundcloud.com/montone-2/minimalist
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Written and hosted by Mike Rugnetta (@mikerugnetta)
(who also has a podcast! Reasonably Sound: http://bit.ly/1sCn0BF)
Made by Kornhaber Brown (http://www.kornhaberbrown.com)

1:00:31

Highly Evolved Beings

Music inspired by the Beings of the Spheres, for the spiritual awakening.
Good listening t...

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

2:07:43

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical ...

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnFromMasters/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

0:47

Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Voices of America: Crystal Costa in Fantastic Beings | English National Ballet

Check out First SoloistCrystal Costa performing in Aszure Barton's Fantastic Beings, which returns as part of Voices of America.
More Info/Book tickets ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk/voices
Subscribe for more videos ⟶ http://bit.ly/2hZtle8
Originally created as part of English National Ballet’s She Said programme in 2016, Fantastic Beings is a vigorous, energetic work for 16 dancers, accompanied by Mason Bates’s dynamic score performed live by English National Ballet Philharmonic.
––––––––––––––––
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk
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Twitter ⟶ https://twitter.com/enballet
Instagram ⟶ http://instagram.com/englishnationalballet
Soundcloud ⟶ https://soundcloud.com/english-national-ballet
––––––––––––––––
English National Ballet is an award-winning company that brings world-class classical ballet to the widest possible audience.
We are bold and ambitious, and under the leadership of Artistic Director, Tamara Rojo, our aim is to honour the tradition of great classical ballet while embracing change, evolving the art form for future generations.
Website ⟶ http://www.ballet.org.uk

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD)
Description: "Turner took classical genres and scenes - the stately landscape in well-designed compositions and historical events writ large - and infused them with a new dynamic in painting. He reflected on the increasing importance of individual experience in the era of the Enlightenment, where the perceptions of human beings led to exalted personal moments and sublime interactions with nature. Through this dedication to rendering heightened states of consciousness and being, he helped define the cross-disciplinary artistic movement of Romanticism, setting the stage for later developments in painting subjective experiences that would lead to Impressionism. In some of his later works especially, Turner responded to the arrival of the modern era by making the contraptions of human invention powerfully, sometimes threateningly present..
---
MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Almost in F - Tranquillity
Almost in F - Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100394
Artist: http://incompetech.com/
SUBSCRIBE: www.youtube.com/c/LearnFromMasters?sub_confirmation=1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnFromMasters/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+LearnFromMasters
Contact: LearnFromMasters01@gmail.com
SUPPORT MY WORK AT: https://www.patreon.com/LearnFromMasters
---
Thank you so much for your support!

Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet: Nourishing Heart and Body through Art

World-renowned choreographer Alonzo King, and four artists from his international touring company, demonstrate “what the body is” and how ideas can be communicated through physical language. They offer new insights into artistic obsession and the emphasis on the mind and the heart dancing the bodily instrument. A choreographed performance will be followed by a conversation with Alonzo King highlighting the importance of art in developing wholeness — both in human beings and in communities.

François Rochon speaks about key lessons from his multiple decades experience in value investing.
About François Rochon:
Francois Rochon was educated as an engineer at the École Polytechnique of Montreal. After graduating with his Masters Degree (in Science), he worked as a researcher and network engineer for INRS-Telecom and Teleglobe Canada. Following his lifelong passion for investing, he decided to focus his career on professional money management. After managing family accounts between 1993 and 1996, he joined Montrusco & Associates as an analyst and was then promoted to Portfolio Manager. At Montrusco, Francois managed US accounts totaling more than $250 million. In December 1998, Francois founded GivernyCapital in order to offer investment management services to clients based on his investment philosophy of owning outstanding companies for the long term. He also sits on various boards of directors.
Moderated by Saurabh Madaan.

1:14:42

The Art of Listening - Music Documentary (2017)

The Art of Listening is a documentary film about the journey music takes to reach a listen...

Human Beings Were Never Born to Read: Science of the Reading Brain (2007)

Proust was involved in writing and publishing from an early age. In addition to the literary magazines with which he was associated, and in which he published while at school (La Revue verte and La Revue lilas), from 1890 to 1891 he published a regular society column in the journal Le Mensuel.[5] In 1892 he was involved in founding a literary review called Le Banquet (also the French title of Plato's Symposium), and throughout the next several years Proust published small pieces regularly in this journal and in the prestigious La Revue Blanche.
In 1896 Les Plaisirs et les Jours, a compendium of many of these early pieces, was published. The book included a foreword by Anatole France, drawings by Mme Lemaire in whose salon Proust was a frequent guest, and who inspired Proust's Mme Verdurin. She invited him and Reynaldo Hahn to her château de Réveillon (the model for Mme Verdurin's La Raspelière) in summer 1894, and for three weeks in 1895. This book was so sumptuously produced that it cost twice the normal price of a book its size.
That year Proust also began working on a novel, which was eventually published in 1952 and titled Jean Santeuil by his posthumous editors. Many of the themes later developed in In Search of Lost Time find their first articulation in this unfinished work, including the enigma of memory and the necessity of reflection; several sections of In Search of Lost Time can be read in the first draft in Jean Santeuil. The portrait of the parents in Jean Santeuil is quite harsh, in marked contrast to the adoration with which the parents are painted in Proust's masterpiece. Following the poor reception of Les Plaisirs et les Jours, and internal troubles with resolving the plot, Proust gradually abandoned Jean Santeuil in 1897 and stopped work on it entirely by 1899.
Beginning in 1895 Proust spent several years reading Carlyle, Emerson, and John Ruskin. Through this reading he refined his theories of art and the role of the artist in society. Also, in Time Regained Proust's universal protagonist recalls having translated Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies. The artist's responsibility is to confront the appearance of nature, deduce its essence and retell or explain that essence in the work of art. Ruskin's view of artistic production was central to this conception, and Ruskin's work was so important to Proust that he claimed to know "by heart" several of Ruskin's books, including The Seven Lamps of Architecture, The Bible of Amiens, and Praeterita.[5]
Proust set out to translate two of Ruskin's works into French, but was hampered by an imperfect command of English. To compensate for this he made his translations a group affair: sketched out by his mother, the drafts were first revised by Proust, then by Marie Nordlinger, the English cousin of his friend and sometime lover[14] Reynaldo Hahn, then finally polished by Proust. Questioned about his method by an editor, Proust responded, "I don't claim to know English; I claim to know Ruskin".[5][15] The Bible of Amiens, with Proust's extended introduction, was published in French in 1904. Both the translation and the introduction were well-reviewed; Henri Bergson called Proust's introduction "an important contribution to the psychology of Ruskin", and had similar praise for the translation.[5] At the time of this publication, Proust was already translating Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, which he completed in June 1905, just before his mother's death, and published in 1906. Literary historians and critics have ascertained that, apart from Ruskin, Proust's chief literary influences included Saint-Simon, Montaigne, Stendhal, Flaubert, George Eliot, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and Leo Tolstoy.
1908 was an important year for Proust's development as a writer. During the first part of the year he published in various journals pastiches of other writers. These exercises in imitation may have allowed Proust to solidify his own style. In addition, in the spring and summer of the year Proust began work on several different fragments of writing that would later coalesce under the working title of Contre Sainte-Beuve. Proust described his efforts in a letter to a friend: "I have in progress: a study on the nobility, a Parisian novel, an essay on Sainte-Beuve and Flaubert, an essay on women, an essay on pederasty (not easy to publish), a study on stained-glass windows, a study on tombstones, a study on the novel".[5]
From these disparate fragments Proust began to shape a novel on which he worked continually during this period. The rough outline of the work centered on a first-person narrator, unable to sleep, who during the night remembers waiting as a child for his mother to come to him in the morning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proust

Director Evan Falbaum spent 12 months in Shreveport, Louisiana with visual artist Nick Cave and captured the profound way in which he delivered his message of change to the Shreveport community. In this new documentary, go behind the scenes to see and hear Nick Cave's “AS IS” project from its beginning in the Shreveport RegionalArts Council boardroom all the way to the premiere of the performance of “AS IS by NICKCAVE.” Featuring hundreds of local artists, musicians, soundsuit dancers, and members of the community working together AS IS.
This project is the culmination of 8 months of filming and 8 months of editing, that began in August 2015, went through the March 2016 performance, and concluded with the premiere of the film in November 2016.
OfficialSelection 2017 New Orleans Film Festival
Now available on Amazon Video:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N4AVR5K/ref=sr_1_1?s=instant-video&ie=UTF8&qid=1481079616&sr=1-1&keywords=as+is+by+nick+cave
Directed and Edited by: Evan Falbaum
Cinematography by: Evan Falbaum & Kemerton Hargrove
Additional Music by: Michael Futreal
Shot in 6K on a Red Epic Dragon with Rokinon Cine DS lenses.
http://www.nickcaveasis.com
http://www.shrevearts.org
http://www/moviesauce.com
https://www.facebook.com/Nick-Cave-Visual-Artist-299253877181/?fref=ts
http://www.jackshainman.com/artists/nick-cave/

52:53

Conversations | Curator Talk | I was Raised on the Internet

Curators from three major institutions collaborating on exhibitions which focus on paralle...

Conversations | Arist Talk | Oh the Humanity!

Artist Cécile B. Evans discusses her practice with SusannePfeffer, director of the MuseumFridericianum and curator of the German pavilion at this year's Venice Biennale. This talk, titled after Herbert Oglevee’s historic 1937 quote on the Hindenburg disaster, considers man's relationship to technology. In her work, Evans examines the influence of technologies on human beings and how the contemporary human condition is shaped by the person-to-machine exchange. Evans will expand on her current projects, the burning questions she is dealing with in her work, and her visions for the future.
Cécile B. Evans, Artist, London, in conversation with Susanne Pfeffer, Director, Fridericianum, Kassel, and Curator, German Pavilion, 57th Venice Biennale.
Saturday, June 17 2017, 4pm - 5pm
Filmed on site at ArtBasel in Basel 2017.

6:50:42

HOW TO ANALYZE PEOPLE ON SIGHT - FULL AudioBook - Human Analysis, Psychology, Body Language

How To Analyze People On Sight - FULL Audio Book - by Elsie Lincoln Benedict & Ralph Pain ...

Prof. Elliot W. Eisner: "What Do the Arts Teach?"

Watch video of Elliot W. Eisner, Lee JacksProfessor of Education and professor of art at Stanford University, speaking in September 2006 on "What Do the Arts Teach?" The speech was the second of the 2006-2007 Chancellors Lecture Series and part of Vanderbilts annual Family Weekend.
In his lecture, "What Do the Arts Teach?," Eisner explored the ways in which the process of thinking and creating artistically can and should be used to improve educational practice in every discipline. He argued that that the distinctive forms of thinking needed to create artistically crafted work are relevant not only to what students do, but also to virtually all aspects of what educators do from the design of curricula, to the practice of teaching, to the features of the environment in which students and teachers live.

42:37

Conversations | Artist Talk | Artificial Lives

Bangalore-based artist Aparna Rao, part of the collective Pors & Rao, discusses her work a...

Conversations | Artist Talk | Artificial Lives

Bangalore-based artist Aparna Rao, part of the collective Pors & Rao, discusses her work and artistic practice with patron Alia Al-Senussi. Rao’s high-tech art installations draw upon her knowledge of mechanical and electronic engineering, programming and manufacturing. The results are a form of 'beings' that incorporate physical movement and responsive behaviors: a typewriter that sends out emails or a camera that, rather than capturing your image, makes you invisible.
Aparna Rao, Artist, Pors & Rao, Bangalore/Zurich, in conversation with Alia Al-Senussi, Art Patron, London.
Thursday, June 15, 2017, 5pm - 6pm.
Filmed on site at Art Basel in Basel 2017.

Highly Evolved Beings...

What DMT is like - DMT Trip Simulation (1080p)...

William Turner: A collection of 1530 paintings (HD...

Leon Botstein: Art Now (Aesthetics Across Music, P...

Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet: Nourishing Heart and B...

François Rochon: "The Art of Investing: Analyzing...

The Art of Listening - Music Documentary (2017)...

Human Beings Were Never Born to Read: Science of t...

AS IS by Nick Cave - Art Documentary (2016) - Soun...

Conversations | Curator Talk | I was Raised on the...

Conversations | Arist Talk | Oh the Humanity!...

HOW TO ANALYZE PEOPLE ON SIGHT - FULL AudioBook - ...

Prof. Elliot W. Eisner: "What Do the Arts Teach?"...

Conversations | Artist Talk | Artificial Lives...

Stephen Hawking was working right up until his death last week on his final work – A SmoothExit from EternalInflation – which is currently being reviewed by a leading scientific journal. &nbsp;. According to reports, the work predicts that the universe would eventually end when stars run out of energy ... ....

Circuit Court of Appeals, based in San Francisco, last year struck down the Arizona policy, ruling the state cannot develop its own definition of immigrants who are authorized to be in the United States and only the federal government had that power, the report said.Arizona appealed to the Supreme Court, saying the 9th Circuit’s decision ran roughshod over state sovereignty, Reuters reported....

Two men were injured in the latest blast while walking down the road in a residential area with the latest explosion creating even more chaos surrounding the mystery that's caused concern for many local residents ... “What we have seen now is a significant change from what appeared to be three very targeted attacks to what was, last night, an attack that would have hit a random victim that happened to walk by,” Manley said....

The decision is a loss for the GOP who was trying to seek a preliminary injunction to stop the map from being used in the primary election this May and the general election later this year in November ... However, the judges said that lawmakers don't have the standing to bring the challenge on that grounds since that would have to be brought up by the General Assembly as an institution....

All the paintings on show are titled with a number after the word "spice", reflecting the artist's willful "misreading" of Western art, just like the exhibition's name Spices, which refers to explorer Christopher Columbus who mistook the Americas for the Indies, and a kind of Caribbean tree bark for a new spice from the East... There's no need to be correct about anything in the art world," says Xie, 48....

The Harlem native took to Instagram Sunday night (Mar ... [readmore.7980882] ... She even noted her influence on older rap veterans. “I can see how my influence has inspired so many of the artists I looked up to as a child and so many artists that came after me ... I may not be the most popular . ... I can see how my influence has inspired so many of the artists I looked up to as a child and so many artists that came after me ... ....

“One thing I noticed, being in terrestrial radio, especially in the last year, was that we weren’t breaking artists,” Daniels says ... “A lot of these (new) artists, you listen to them, and as someone who’s been in country radio for 20 years, it’s like, ‘Why isn’t this person on the radio? Everyone should be playing this,’ ” she continues....

5) and Jimmie's Chicken Shack (April 1). Other artists scheduled to appear are ... 12), Shwayze (Aug ... Seven of the 23 Sunday dates have artistsTBA, and many of those already have acts slated that will be announced in the future, according to The Boathouse ... .......

“Full CircleNightmare,” Craft’s second album of original material (he made an album of cover songs by female artists for Sub Pop in 2017) was released in February and, while more polished, is still full of the bar-friendly, rollicking rock ‘n’ roll that has earned Craft “an artist to watch” ......

'Apparently, the 40-year-old was very aggressive in pursuing the former Danity Kaneartist - telling Aubrey he loved her and that he wanted to be with her,' reports Perez Hilton... 'Apparently, the 40-year-old was very aggressive in pursuing the former Danity Kane artist - telling Aubrey he loved her,' claims Perez Hilton (O'Day and Don Jr on set in 2011)....

However American rapper Cardi has expressed her concerns for the music industry, and believes that more female artists need speak out about their experiences ... ‘When I was trying to be a vixen, people were like, “You want to be on the cover of this magazine?” Then they pull their dicks out ... However, even though the 25-year-old believes more needs to be done in the music world, female artists have started to speak out....

Music composed in the Nazi concentration camps will be played to a public audience for the very first time, at an extraordinary international concert ... The concert is being staged by leading Jewish charityJNF UK both to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the State of Israel and to raise awareness of increasing levels of global antisemitism and holocaust denial....